First drive: Caterham Seven 160 is the light entertainer

A FEW important details. This car is dubbed the 160 on account of its power-to-weight ratio, and it gets that from a new engine.
2014 Caterham Seven 1602014 Caterham Seven 160
2014 Caterham Seven 160

Other models in the range still use modern Ford units to good effect, but the 160 gets a three-cylinder turbocharged Suzuki engine of just 660cc. If that doesn’t sound like much for a sportscar, you’d be right.

But that’s not a problem because some things remain gloriously unchanged. Chiefly, the Seven’s minimalist approach to everything. The optional doors are canvas and plastic, everything is operated via toggle switches and the heater has only just been made standard. No car is as fantastically minimalist as a Caterham.

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There’s an honest, retro charm to it; authentically so, because not a huge amount has changed since the Seven began its life as a Lotus way back in 1957. The Seven 160 has its own smart logo and as standard wears modest steel wheels rather than the usual alloys, and while that might sound a bit old-tech, it adds to the charm. If the Seven 160’s looks don’t raise a smile, look elsewhere.

There’s no hiding the fact that the Seven has little space and isn’t very practical. In fact you’d have a job hiding a piece of paper containing that sentence anywhere in the car. There is a boot of sorts but, if you have the roof down, that’s where it lives. You can squash a couple of bags in there, but that’s it. The cabin is tiny too, with you and your passenger squished in tightly together. But the pay-off comes when you drive it.

The fact that there’s very little to the Seven 160 means it weighs just 490kg. For reference, a similarly-powerful Ford Fiesta weighs twice as much. So, although the three-cylinder turbo only offers a modest 80bhp, it gets along smartly, particularly thanks to the good torque. The gearshift is meaty and fast with closely-stacked ratios, so it will sprint to 60mph in only 6.5 seconds.

Performance is only half the story however, because it’s the Seven’s directness that is its great appeal. The tiny steering wheel is alive in your hands and barely needs more than a quarter turn to send you darting off in another direction. And those skinny tyres offer decent, but not excessive, grip, so you can enjoy its fantastic balance.

On the one hand you could say you don’t get much for your money when the options list includes things like carpet, a heater and weather protection. But they’re not expensive options, and the base price is just £17,995. Better still, if you want to build it yourself (Caterham reckons you’ll need about 60 hours), you can get it for just £14,995. Bargain. And it can manage almost 60mpg, if you’re careful with your right foot.

If you’re an enthusiast and you despair at the way modern cars are sanitised, electronic-laden bloat boxes, the Seven is just the tonic. There are increasingly mad versions that add power and save even more weight, but the basic recipe is the same. Sure it’s an occasional car unless you’re very keen (and probably single) but until you’ve driven a Seven, you can’t really say you’ve driven at all.

VITAL STATS

Car Caterham Seven 160

Price £17,995

Engine 0.66-litre, petrol, 3 cyl, turbocharged, 80 bhp, 79lb ft

Performance Max speed 100mph, 0-62mph 6.5s

Economy 57.6mpg

CO2 emissions 114g/km

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